55wagon wrote:Anyone have any experience or knowledge on this? I have a friend who approached me with this yesterday. Supposedly he may have an in and I'm intrigued.
Here's some of the basics Im not familiar with and curious about.
Are they true or false?
Work 4 months out of the year only (pretty much 7 days a week but only 4 months).
Most on stand by
Pay is way better than ag. Was saying something like $600 a day + per diem(whether u fly or not)plus a pretty fat hourly rate on top of that.
I really love ag work but this seems to good to be, which most times....
And I could still do ag other part of year.
I am as far from an expert on this field as you can get...

However most everyone I fly with is carded and some still fly seats. I initially got in to flying ag with the notion of flying a seat for the operator in my (then) home town. He has since offered me a seat on several occasions, as have others. Having found the position I am in now, it's just not currently in the cards for me....
Work schedule... ya, I'd say you're pretty spot on...
Pay? well there are SEAT seats, and there are SEAT seats, there are ag seats and there are ag seat.... comparing them loosely will get you no where, you need to compare specifics... beyond that, as you already know, ag seats tend to lend themselves better to people who are willing to diversify, and 'work' the 'system'. SEAT gigs work best for those that want to park somewhere and let someone else handle their job security...
More to the 'pay' point, it's been my experience that in the current market the loose 'average' for an aggie is about $200./hr hobbs... where you fit your paycheck depends on where and what you fly. If you fly the national average of 300 hrs a year, and are on the low side of the average, this may not be so appealing... conversely like you I know many ag pilots turning 1100-1200 hrs a year, and many earn way, wayyy beyond the average hourly figure. I know SEAT drivers turning the same dollar for dollar, and I know SEAT drivers making much less...
Almost all the SEAT guys I know that no longer fly SEATS quit for the reasons guys stated above... It far better suits a single nomad than a married or family man...
I'm sure you're aware that at one time it was almost a pre-requisite to have flown ag prior to flying a SEAT. Then with much Govt. intervention, that changed, to the point that it was pretty well detrimental to have flown ag prior to applying for a SEAT slot... Communication skills and regulation structuring dictated that they lean more towards the airline type.. I personally know a couple guys who went from being recreational pilots (glider pilots to boot) to flying AT-802s... just like that!...
I *think* that the nature of the flying, and the environment has brought them back full circle and they are now leaning once again to ag pilots... of course all of this only matters in getting that first seat, and it sounds like you already have that option...
In the end I think the only thing that really matters is why you are flying what you fly. It is pretty far removed from the flying you are currently doing. If you are doing what you are doing because you love the flying, you'll be sorely disappointed in a SEAT. If you're doing what you are doing because the money then it probably won't matter a lick
Gimme a buzz in a few days, I'll be home and can turn you on to some really, really cool SEAT drivers...
Take care, Rob